COURT | Patrick Yeagle
He was left to die in a pool of his own blood “like roadkill.”
That’s
how Sangamon County Circuit Judge Leo Zappa described the death of
Danny Dapron Jr., a 30-year-old cyclist killed in a hit-and-run accident
on Aug. 8, 2010. Zappa sentenced the driver, Ursula Jones, 23, of
Springfield, to 10 years in prison on March 21.
The
sentence followed emotional testimony from Dapron’s grandfather, Leo
Dapron, who told the court that the younger Dapron helped around the
house and “was a friend to everyone.”
“He
was a good boy – a real good boy,” Leo Dapron said, his voice wavering
during testimony meant to sway Zappa’s sentencing decision. “I think of
Danny every night. I say a prayer for him every night. … I hope and pray
no one out there has to go through that, because there’s a loss there
you can’t fulfill.”
Sangamon
County assistant state’s attorney Emily Steere asked Zappa to order the
maximum sentence of 15 years for Jones, while Jones’ attorney, W. Scott
Hanken of Springfield, requested probation.
Hanken submitted to the
court several letters of recommendation from Jones’ family, friends and
teachers. He implored Zappa to go easy on Jones, whom he said had taken
responsibility for Dapron’s death and had changed her life. Jones
attended Lincoln’s Challenge Academy for troubled youth and had enrolled
at Lincoln Land Community College, where
she showed promise in graphic arts, Hanken said. Jones also cooperated
with Dapron’s family in a negligence lawsuit filed against Jones, Hanken
said. The lawsuit also names Springfield bar Mac’s Lounge, 1231 E. Cook
St., as a defendant.
But
Steere told Zappa that Jones had been pulled over twice since the
accident and ticketed for not wearing a seatbelt, and she still uses
marijuana and alcohol regularly.
Jones
had a blood-alcohol level of .157 – nearly twice the legal limit of
.008 – after the accident that killed Dapron, and she tested positive
for marijuana and ecstasy at the time. Though the accident happened more
than a year and a half ago, Jones still hasn’t gone to a court-mandated
rehabilitation program, which Steere said showed it “clearly isn’t
important” to her.
“Even
after spending time in (the Department of Corrections), she will have
an opportunity to start over,” Steere said of Jones. “Danny Dapron won’t
have that chance.”
Jones
has a checkered driving record, with at least 37 traffic offenses
before and after the accident that killed Dapron. Jones’ driving
privileges were temporarily revoked in January 2011, but Hanken said
Jones had received her license back since then. [See “Road hazard,” Feb.
17, 2011.] Addressing the court, Jones stood and spoke in a quiet
voice, briefly glancing across the courtroom at Dapron’s family.
“I’m
sorry to the Dapron family for their loss,” Jones said. “Since it
happened, I’ve thought about it every day. I wish I could make things
better. … Again, I’m sorry for what happened, and I hope the family can
find it in their hearts to forgive me.”
Zappa
recognized Jones’ attempts to change her life, but likened it to
“closing the barn door after all the animals have left.” As he read the
sentence of 10 years, Jones’ head dropped to her hands, and her family,
seated behind her, broke into tears. Hanken asked Zappa to recommend
Jones be placed in a prison facility that provides substance abuse
rehabilitation and higher education opportunities.
Danny
Dapron Sr., the father of the cyclist killed, said he hoped Jones would
have gotten a longer sentence because he doesn’t believe she has
changed.
“I don’t
think she’ll ever do that,” Dapron Sr. said. “If she had any remorse,
she wouldn’t still be going and drinking at Mac’s Lounge and driving. I
just hope she gets the help she needs.”
Contact Patrick Yeagle at pyeagle@illinoistimes.com.